ladwp water system capital program update july 25 th 2013
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Los Angeles’ Water System
Established in 1902 Largest municipally-
owned utility in the U.S. Operating Revenue = $ 1.08 billion (FY2012/13)
3.86 million customers within 473 sq. mi. service area 679,000 active metered services Service elevation from sea level to over 2,400 feet 7,225 miles of pipeline, 114 tanks & reservoirs,
78 pump stations, 421 regulator stations 340-mile long Los Angeles Aqueduct System
The Los Angeles Aqueduct
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Water System Priorities
Regulatory ComplianceSafe Water Supply and Compliance with Regulatory Requirements
Infrastructure ReliabilitySustainable Infrastructure Replacementand Upgrade
Sustainable Water SupplyIncrease Local Supply and Protect theEnvironment
Investments that address these priorities are interdependent and interconnected.
Los Angeles Aqueduct Cascades
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Current and Projected Capital Expenditures
Next 10 yearsCAPITAL $ in millions
Total $8.5BTotal $484M
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Water System Priority:Regulatory Compliance
Safety of the water we provide to our customers is LADWP’s #1 PriorityDrinking Water Regulations Require Major Investment in Water Infrastructure – two major water initiatives:
1) Open Reservoirs: cover, replace, or provide add. treatment Regulation: Long Term 2 Surface Water Treatment Rule (LT2, April 1, 2014)
2) Chloramine Disinfection: system-wide change will reduce harmful disinfection byproducts
Regulation: Stage 2 Disinfection By-Products Rule (DBP2, June 30, 2021)
Failure to comply with regulatory requirements is NOT an option.
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Shallow flooding dust mitigation
Gravel dust mitigation
Water System Priority:Regulatory Compliance
Owens Lake Dust Mitigation Project• 90% of dust is controlled and Owens
Lake is no longer in the top 10 list of PM10 (dust) emissions
• 42 square miles of dust control in operation
• Over $1.2 billion spent to date in capital (since Sep. 2000); $72 million in annual O&M (including cost of replacement water)
• Using up to 95,000 acre-feet per year of water from Los Angeles Aqueduct
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Water System Priority:Regulatory Compliance
2012/13Next
10 yearsCapital Investment
Reservoirs & Trunk Lines $ 159.0 $1,337.6
Chlorine to Chloramine 26.8
100.5
Water Treatment 13.2
265.2
Owens Lake Dust Mitigation 49.4 337.3
Total $248.4 $2,040.6
Current and Projected Expenditures:($ in Millions)
Includes Water Quality Improvement Program and Owens Lake Dust Mitigation Project
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Water System Priority:Infrastructure Reliability
LADWP’s Water System is large and complex Continually aging (233 miles of pipe are over a century old and 70% of pipes
are more than 50 years old)Maintenance and replacement is an ongoing and continuous effort
Water System Annual Leak Rate 15 leaks per 100-miles is below N. America
average of 25 leaks per 100-miles of pipe
Current 315-year Pipe Replacement Cycle - severely deficient of frequency
required for continued reliabilityOur 7,200 miles of water distribution pipeline is the backbone of
our delivery infrastructure – we work very hard to keep its service reliability
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Water System Priority:Infrastructure Reliability
2012/13Next
10 yearsCapital Investment
Mainlines & Trunk Lines $ 63.2 $ 1,619.6
Reservoir, Pump, & Reg. Stations 21.2
634.1
Meters, Services, Hydrants 40.4
521.8
Seismic, Facilities, Equip., IT, Other 18.4 690.9
L.A. Aqueduct System 11.5 188.3
Total $154.7 $ 3,654.8
Current and Projected Expenditures:($ in Millions)
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Water System Priority:Sustainable Water
SupplyThe City of Los Angeles plans to meet all new water demands through local resource development.Environmental regulatory challenges and impacts of climate change requires continued focus on four major water initiatives:
1)Stormwater Capture2)Water Conservation2)Water Recycling3)San Fernando Basin Groundwater Remediation
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Water System Priority:Sustainable Water
SupplyFYE 2008 – 2012 Average
Total: 574,600 AFY Fiscal Year 2034 – 35
Total: 711,000 AFY
LA Aqueduct 206,81537%
Local GW64,46611%
Recycled Water6,7061%
MWD 297,94551%
Goal is to reduce our dependence on purchased supplemental imported water by 50 percent by 2035 or sooner
Charts do not reflect 100,000 AF of existing conservation
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Water System Priority:Sustainable Water
Supply
2012/13Next
10 yearsCapital Investment
Groundwater Management & Remediation $ 12.9 $1,561.9
Water Recycling 27.9
814.3
Stormwater Capture 25.1
156.8
Water Conservation 15.1 217.3
Total $ 81.0 $ 2,750.3
Current and Projected Expenditures:($ in Millions)
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